During the last decade, around two thirds of lions killed for sport in Africa ended up being shipped to America, and numbers have been rising sharply.

According to Jeff Flocken of the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW), “The king of the jungle is heading toward extinction, and yet Americans continue to kill lions for sport. Our nation is responsible for importing over half of all lions brought home by trophy hunters each year. The African lion is in real trouble and it is time for this senseless killing and unsustainable practice to stop.”

When adult male lions are killed, new males may take over the pride and kill the previous male’s cubs.

Unfortunately, the number of lions killed by trophy hunters is only part of a larger picture. Hunters prefer to bag large male lions, which can set off struggles for dominance among the survivors, often leading to the deaths of other adult males, females and cubs.

African lion heading towards extinction

Despite being one of Africa’s most charismatic mammals, the African lion is already under serious threat and its population has fallen sharply in the last 100 years. Lions have been lost from large parts of Africa, and only seven countries are now thought to contain more than 1,000 lions each.

Trophy hunting is just one of many threats faced by the African lion.

The single biggest threat to the African lion is conflict with humans, with many lions shot or poisoned by farmers trying to protect livestock. The spread of agriculture and development has also reduced the lion’s habitat and decreased the availability of its prey. The African lion is now becoming increasingly rare outside of protected areas, and its populations are becoming more isolated and fragmented within its shrinking range.

Controversial hunting ban

The new petition to the US government is calling for a ban on the import of lion parts into the United States in an effort to reduce this growing threat. A listing on the U.S. Endangered Species Act would also help to raise awareness of the importance of conserving this beautiful big cat.

African lions have undergone a sharp decline in the last century. The species as a whole is listed as Vulnerable by the IUCN.

However, some argue that responsible hunting can help preserve lion populations, and that existing regulations, such as CITES, should be reinforced to protect the African lion.

According to Luke Hunter, executive vice-president of Panthera, “If you remove hunting, the very real risk is that you force African governments to generate revenue from that land and the obvious thing is cattle and crops which just wipe out habitats.”